Book Review: Being Han in Xinjiang
…leaving Xinjiang rather than risking detention or re-education by publically voicing discontent. Yet in the long term, Xinjiang cannot be ruled without their support. An interesting conundrum.
— Adrian Zenz (@adrianzenz) 8. April 2019
They will make it look like a tragic accident and send their condolences… https://t.co/Iv8t8eZ690
— Adrian Zenz (@adrianzenz) 8. April 2019
Authoritarianism „does not attempt to change the world and human nature.“ In contrast, a totalitarian regime attempts to control virtually all aspects of social life, including the economy, education, art, science, private life and morals of citizens.
— Adrian Zenz (@adrianzenz) 8. April 2019
Let’s read more and talk more about Xinjiang and Chen Quanguo. @adrianzenz wrote last year that Chen helped launch the CCP’s „de-extremification“ campaign, really an intense social engineering campaign driving at forced ethnic assimilation: https://t.co/J4eG64ZexGhttps://t.co/LhKfvim6a3
— Jamestown China Brief (@ChinaBriefJT) 8. April 2019
Note that the watchtower has the typical round shape of a detention center watchtower (different from „re-education“ camps).
— Adrian Zenz (@adrianzenz) 8. April 2019
Five #Australian children trapped in #China amid #Uyghur crackdown
— claudio tecchio (@DossierTibet) 8. April 2019
#China : Ancient #Buddhist Temple Suppressed in Shanxi Province . Authorities are harassing a once flourishing, more than 1,000-year-old temple and subject monks to increased control and indoctrination.
— claudio tecchio (@DossierTibet) 8. April 2019
I agree with James that this kind of censorship should become a media story. It is completely inacceptable. @GroseTimothyhttps://t.co/43yqDZrHed
— Adrian Zenz (@adrianzenz) 6. April 2019
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